KAIRALI
ANGELS SHARE
Direction: Ken Loach
Production: Rebecca O’Brien
Screenplay: Paul Laverty, George Fenton
Cinematography: Robbie Ryan
Editing: Jonathan Morris
Music: George Fenton
Cast: Roger Allam, Daniel Portman, John Henshaw, William Ruane, Lorne MacFadyen, Paul Brannigan, John Joe Hay, David Goodall, Finlay Harris, Paul Donnelly
Awards/Festivals
Cannes- Jury Prize, San Sebastian-Audience Award, Karlovy Vary, AFI FEST, New Zealand, Sydney, Vancouver
Winner of the Jury Prize at Cannes, Angels’ Share is a bitter-sweet comedy carrying a message of hope for the ‘black sheep’ of society. The film follows Robbie, as he sneaks into the maternity hospital and holds his newborn son, Luke for the first time. Overwhelmed by the moment, he swears that Luke will not have the same tragic life he has had. Escaping a prison sentence narrowly, he’s given one last chance….While serving a community service order, he meets Rhino, Albert and Mo who, like him, find it impossible to find work because of their criminal records. The four see a chance at redemption at an unlikely place- the whisky industry. Can- particularly rare and expensive malt- offer them a way out of poverty, or will they hit the bottom of the barrel? Only the angels know.
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THE EXAM (A Vizsga)
Hungary/2011/DCPColour/89’/HungarianHebrew
Direction: Peter Bergendy
Production: Istvan Bodzsar
Screenplay: Norbert Kobli
Cinematography: Zsolt Toth
Editing: Istvan Kiraly
Music: Gergely Parudy
Cast: Janos Kulka, Zsolt Nagy,
Gabriella Hamori, Peter Scherer
Awards/Festivals
Karlovy Vary
The revolutionary push of autumn 1956 has been stifled and Hungary is enveloped in an atmosphere of fear. And so, Agent Jung, posing as a private teacher, has to undergo a test of loyalty administered by his superior and friend Markó. Living and working in an environment where the spies themselves are spied upon demands a fair amount of vigilance and an ability to make quick judgments, which contributes to the sustained tension and also the dynamics of an otherwise smallscale film. This classic story of a tragic phase in Hungarian history fluctuates between a generic mix, a personal drama, and a documentary of period conditions. These latter are portrayed with an emphasis on secret police practices without ever overlooking the emotional dimensions. And as friends spy upon each other, can relationships be maintained? Can normalcy be restored ever?
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MAI MORIRE
Mexico/2012/DCP/Colour/84’/Spanish
Direction: Enrique Rivero
Production: Paola Herrera, Enrique Rivero
Screenplay: Enrique Rivero, Aleka Rivero
Cinematography: Arnau Valls Colomer and
Gerardo Barroso
Sound: Alejandro de Icaza, Jose Miguel Enriquez
Editing: Enrique Rivero, Javier Ruiz Caldera
Music: Alejandro de Icaza
Cast: Margarita Saldana, Amalia Salas,
Juan Chirinos
Awards/Festivals
Rome
Chayo returns to her hometown to care for her elderly mother and cope with her death. Surrounded by love and sublime beauty, Chayo has to give up something that as a woman and mother is inalienable. That will be the price of her freedom.
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THE INHERITORS OF THE EARTH (Bhoomiyude Avakashikal)
India/2012/DCP/Colour/114’/Malayalam
Direction, Screenplay: T.V.Chandran
Production: Anand Kumar
Cinematography: Ramachandra Babu
Editing: Johnkutty
Music: Sandeep Pillai
Cast: Kailash, Sreenivasan, Mythili, Shahabaz Aman, Meera Nandan
The film addresses the loss of identity of modern man jostled by the chance encounters of a selfimposed make believe world. As the film opens we see Mohanachandran Nair and Menon entering the compound of what looks like a forlorn house that has long been abandoned. Mohanachandran is delighted at the sights and sounds around. He gets to hear something about the house being a haunted one… The film treats space with an implied division between the house and its compound on the one hand and the world outside on the other.
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NIGHT ACROSS THE STREET (La Noche De Enfrente)
Chile-France/2012/DCP/Colour/110’/Spanish-French
Direction, Screenplay: Raul Ruiz
Production: Christian Aspee,
Francois Margolin
Cinematography: Inti Briones
Editing: Valeria Sarmiento, Raul Ruiz,
Christian Aspee
Music: Jorge Arriagada
Cast: Christian Vadim, Sergio Hernandez, Valentina Vargas, Chamila Rodriguez, Pedro Vicuna, Pedro Villagra, Marcial Edwards
Awards/Festivals
Cannes, Toronto, New York, Sitges, Chicago Paris Cinema IFF, HK Summer IFF, Mumbai Ostrava Kamera Oko, Best Cinematography
Based on Hernan del Solar’s novel, Night Across the Street is both a homecoming and a stocktaking.
Drawing on his own obsessions and memories, Ruiz traverses his chosen imaginative landscape in two time periods. In the present, his white-haired alter-ego Don Celso- a “man without ideas”-, awaits his assassin. He looks back on his life through his younger self, Rhododendron, an impish youth ambling the streets of Chile. As Ruiz moves seamlessly between Don Celso and Rhododendron, he casts longing looks back to his childhood memories while fatalistically awaiting a death that he is convinced lies just around the corner. Burnished by a golden haze that gives the film a sepia-tint, Night Across the Street is both a moving meditation on a man’s mortality as well as an insightful account of an artist’s brilliant career.
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KALABHAVAN
POONG SAN
Phungsangae
South Korea/2011/DCP/Colour/121’/ Korean
Direction: Jaihong Juhn
Production, Screenplay: Kim Ki-duk
Cinematography: Lee Jeong-in
Editing: Shin Cheol
Sound: Lee Seung-yeop, Kim Sang-woon
Music: Inyoung Park
Cast: Yoon Kye-sang, Kim Gyu-ri,
Han Gi-Joong, Moo-Seong Choi, Yoo Ha-Bok
Awards/ Festivals
Busan, CPH PIX, Rome, Dubai, Stiges
In the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas, a mysterious hero operates. Nicknamed “Poongsan”, the nameless hero is a gift from heaven. Uniting separated families, saving people in need, and delivering messages \ between those pulled apart forever by the turns of history, the invincible hero seems to pick his jobs randomly. But his way of communication is comparably barren, flowing through the messages left to the fence of the demilitarized zone. When Poongsan decides to accept a mission to carry the lover of a North Korean political exile into the South, his carefully polished working methods suddenly shatter to pieces setting the courier and his human cargo face to face with more far fetching consequences than that they would have ever have dared to dream of.
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500 & 5
India/2012/Colour/120’/Tamil
Direction,Screenplay: Raghu Jeganathan
Production: Mohandass Radhakrishnan,
Kousalya Jeganathan, Ramesh Mourthy
Cinematography: Mohandass Radhakirshnan
Music: Sivapragasam
Sound: A.M.Rahamathulla
Cast: Deepak Sundararajan, Vinoth Michael,
Ramesh Mourthy, Raveendran, Karthikeyan,
Jacob
A Rs.500-note; five characters; their trysts with the currency bill.
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DRAPCHI
India/2012/35mm/Colour/78’/English
Direction: Arvind Iyer
Production: Iceberg Nine Films
Screenplay: Pooja Ladha Surti
Cinematography: Trevor Tweeten
Editing: Harshal Thakur
Sound: Tim Beale
Music: Arnav Srivastava
Cast: Namgyal Lhamo, Arnav Srivastava
Sarosh Izedyar
Awards/Festivals
Kairo, Warsaw, Osians Cinefan
Drapchi is based on a true story and events from the life of famed Tibetan opera singer Namgyal Lhamo. Yiga Gyalnang, (played by Namgyal Lhamo) a traditional Tibetan opera singer, is abducted one summer morning and finds herself in nearcomplete isolation in an underground prison cell for what the Chinese government sees as rebellion through her songs of freedom. After two years, she breaks free and escapes to Nepal and from there, to the West.
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CLANDESTINE CHILDHOOD (Infancia clandestine)
Argentina, Spain, Brazil/2011/DCP/Colour/112’/Spanish
Direction: Benjamin Avila
Production: Luis Puenzo
Screenplay: Benjamin Avila, Marcelo Muller
Cinematography: Ivan Gierasinchuk
Editing: Gustavo Giani
Sound: Fernando Soldevila
Music: Pedro Onetto, Marta Roca Alonso
Cast: Ernesto Alterio, Natalia Oreiro, Cesar Troncoso
Awards/Festivals
Havana Film Festival- Coral Award
San Sebastian-Casa de America Award
Cannes,Toronto, Philadelphia
Set in 1979 during Argentina’s military dictatorship, Benjamín Ávila’s stylized, semi-autobiographical memoir follows the travails of a fifth-grader who is forced to live under an assumed identity in order to protect his resistance-fighter parents. At first, all seems to go well for Juan/Ernesto. He is enrolled in the local school and quickly makes new friends. But the precarious balance between undercover life and the everyday travails comes to the fore when he falls in love. In a series of vignettes, Ávila weaves together the parallel lives of Juan and Ernesto, as a first kiss between young sweethearts is followed by underground meetings, and childish roughhousing gives way to bullet cartridges stashed in boxes of chocolate. As the family prepares for its confrontation with the forces of repression, Juan finds himself torn between responsibility and the ordinary childhood he yearns for.
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LE GRAND SOIR
France-Belgium/2012/DCP/Colour/92’/
French
Direction, Screenplay: Benoit Delepine, Gustave de Kervern
Production: Jean-Pierre Guerin, Andre Logie
Cinematography: Hugues Poulain
Editing: Stephane Elmadjian
Sound: Bruno Seznec
Cast: Gerard Depardieu, Benoit Poelvoorde, Albert Dupontel, Barbet Schroeder, Yolande Moreau, Miss Ming, Brigitte Fontaine, Stéphane Durieux
Awards/Festivals
Cannes (Un Certain Regard): Special Jury Prize, Melbourne. London, Warsaw
This is the story of two brothers-dynamic opposites of each other- whose paths converge when tragedy strikes one. Self-professed “oldest punk in Europe with a dog,” Not is a forty-something non-conformist who wears the punk uniform of camouflage fatigues, mohawk and jackboots. His brother, Jean-Pierre, is a mattress salesman in a chain store and he is Not’s opposite, straightlaced and line-toeing. When Jean-Pierre’s life starts falling apart and he is threatened with unemployment, the veneer of acquiescence quickly crumples and it doesn’t take long for Not to woo him over to the rebellious side of the street. Characteristically scabrous but still charming, this Un Certain Regard entry sends up its soul-deadening strip-mall milieu and takes jabs at the failings of a consumerist society without ever taking itself too seriously.
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NEW
MY TOMORROW (Il mio Domain)
Italy/2011/35mm/Colour/88’/Italian
Direction: Marina Spada
Production: Francesco Pamphili
Screenplay: Marina Spada,
Daniele Maggioni, Maria Grazia Perria
Cinematography: Sabina Bologna,Giorgio Carella
Editing: Carlotta Cristiani
Music: Paolo Fresu, Bebo Ferra
Cast: Claudia Gerini, Claudia Coli, Raffaele Pisu, Lino Guanciale, Paolo Pierobon, Enrico Bosco
Awards/Festivals
Tiburon IFF, Uruguay IFF, Rome IFF
Italian Film Festival in London
Monica is a successful corporate motivational speaker in Milan who trains employees to fill “emptiness” with new opportunities. But her personal life is one filled with ambiguity and deceit. Every time she returns to her father’s house, the grief and resentment tied to incidents of her youth re-emerge. She senses a growing detachment from Vittorio Corradi, her boss and lover. The movie presents a different kind of Milan rarely seen in movies, where within the walls of corporate buildings personal livelihoods are ruthlessly cut short against the backdrop of the European economic crisis.
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HOLY MOTORS
France-Germany/2012/DCP/Colour/115’/
French, English, Mandarin
Direction, Screenplay: Leos Carax
Production: Martine Marignac
Cinematography: Caroline Champetier
Editing: Nelly quettier
Sound: Erwan Kerzanet
Music: Neil Hannon
Cast: Denis Lavant, Kylie Minogue, Eva Mendes, Edith Scob, Michel Piccoli
Awards/Festivals
Cannes, Rio, New York, Busan, Sitges
Holy Motors gives us a glimpse into 24 hours in the life of a being moving from life to life: by turns, murderer, beggar, company chairman, monster, worker, family man…Monsieur Oscar seems to be playing roles, plunging headlong into each part. He is alone, but for Céline, the slender blonde woman behind the wheel of the vast engine that transports him around Paris. He’s like a conscientious assassin moving from target to target, in pursuit of the beautiful gesture, the mysterious driving force, the women and the ghosts of past lives. But where is his true home, his family, his refuge? Holy Motors does a good work in painting the sponge-like quality of movies, their malleability, and their capacity for reinvention. Yet, it is a maddening, self-satisfied, though never smug, game of spot-the-reference that seems intended only for a particular type of cinephile.
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MOON AT THE BOTTOM OF THE WELL (Trang Noi Day Gieng)
Vietnam/2008/Colour/121’/Vietnamese
Direction: Vinh Son Nguyen
Production: Nguyen Thai Hoa,
Morteza Mohammadi
Screenplay: Chau Tho
Cinematography: Trinh Hoan,
Nguyen Nam
Editing: Phung Doc Lap
Music: Quoc Bao
Cast: Anh Hong, Vy Thanh, Cao De Hoang, Thi Ha, Anh Hieu, Phuong Lan
Set in Hue, it is the story of the perfect wife in a less-than-perfect marriage. A school teacher shares a childless and unconventional marriage with the school principal. When the secret comes out that he has children with a second wife, with her consent, the scandal drives her to desperate measures.
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7 DAYS IN HAVANA
France-Spain/2012/DCP/Colour/129’/Spanish-English
Direction: Benicio Del Toro, Pablo Trapero, Elia Suleiman, Julio Medem, Gaspar Noe, Juan Carlos Tabio, Laurent Cantet
Production: Didar Domehri, Laurent Baudens, Gael Nouaille, Alvaro Longoria, Fabien Pisani
Screenplay: Leonardo Padura
Cinematography: Daniel Aranyo, Diego Dussuel
Editing: Thomas Fernandez, Rich Fox, Veronique Lange, Alex Rodriguez, Zack Stoff
Sound: Eva Valino, Charly Schmukler, Nicolas De Poulpiquet
Music: Xavi Turull , Descemer Bueno, Kelvis Ochoa
Cast: Daniel Bruehl, Emir Kusturica, Elia Suleiman, Josh Hutcherson, Vladimir Cruz, Mirta Ibarra, Jorge Perugorria
Awards/Festivals
Cannes, San Sebastian, Rio, Melbourne,
Edinburgh, Karlovy Vary, Cockatoo Island Film Festival
A contemporary portrait of this eclectic, vital, unique city, told through a single feature-length movie made of seven chapters and directed by seven internationally acclaimed directors. Each chapter depicts a day of the week through the extraordinary lives of its characters. A world away from the familiar cliches, the film aims to express the soul of Havana and its diversity in a touching, entertaining and funny style. All stories have independent plots, but the connections between them create a powerful dramatic unity. Emblematic Havana landmarks form the backdrop to the chapters in which several characters appear more than once, organically connecting the narratives and demonstrating that in Havana all social spheres intersect.
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SANSHIRO SUGATA
Japan/1945/B&W/83’/Japanese
Direction: Akira Kurosawa
Production: Keiji Matsuzaki
Screenplay: Akira Kurosawa, Tomita Tsuneo
Cinematography: Akira Mimura
Editing: Toshio Goto, Akira Kurosawa
Music: Seiichi Suzuki
Cast: Denjiro Okochi, Susumu Fujita, Yukiko Todoroki, Takashi Shimura
This first effort by Japanese director Akira Kurosawa is based on a best-selling novel about the creation of Judo. Most of the film explores the relationship between its creator and his faithful protégé. In addition to establishing the reputation of Kurosawa, the film made a popular star of Susumu Fujita. Sanshiro Sugata has a compact energy and sense of form that establishes a cinematic intelligence far above the ordinary. It portrays, in an immature and limited fashion, the concerns, ideas, and emotions that will recur in complex and nuanced ways throughout Kurosawa’s career. Sanshiro Sugata is a truly enlightening sketch of so much that was to come.
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ANJALI
BEYOND THE HILLS (Dupa dealuri)
Romania-France-Belgium/2012/DCP/Colour/155’/Romanian
Direction, Production,Screenplay: Cristian Mungiu
Cinematography: Oleg Mutu
Editing: Mircea Olteanu
Sound: Dana Bunescu
Cast: Cosmina Stratan, Cristina Flutur,Valeriu Andriuta, Dana Tapalaga, Catalina Harabagiu
Awards/Festivals
Cannes-Best Screenplay, Best Actresses
Chicago-Gold Hugo, Best Feature
Toronto, New York, Busan, London
Voichita and Alina grew up together in an orphanage. At 19, Alina was taken in by a foster family and later decided to go and work in Germany. Voichita found refuge in an Orthodox monastery and became a nun. There she found not only God but the family she’d never had. Feeling sick and estranged, Alina strives to get Voichita back in her life. Voichita asks permission to leave the monastery temporarily but the Priest’s answer is firm: once you have taken the path of Christ there can be no comings or goings. Voichita is not pre- pared to abandon her newly found peace, while Alina is baffled by her friend’s decision. She starts fighting with all her strength to get Voichita back, but God is the most difficult lover of whom to be jealous.
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FILMISTAAN
India/2012/DCP/Colour/117’/Hindi
Direction, Screenplay: Nitin Kakkar
Production: Satellite Pictures Pvt.Ltd.
Cinematography: Subhransu Das
Editing: Shachindra Vats
Sound: Arun Nambiar, Fasial Majeed
Music: Arijit Datta
Cast: Sharib Hasmi, Inaamulhaq, Kumud Mishra, Gopal Datt
Sunny, a wanna-be-actor who works as an assistant director in Mumbai is summarily thrown out at every audition. Undeterred, he goes with an American crew to the remote areas of Rajasthan to work on a documentary. There, an Islamic terrorist group kidnaps him. The house in which he is confined belongs to a Pakistani, whose trade stems from pirated Hindi films, which he brings back every time he crosses the border. Soon, the two realize they share a cultural bond. The film shows how cinema can be the universal panacea for co-existence.
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IN RECENT TIMES... (Ee Adutha Kaalath...)
India/2012/Colour/160’/Malayalam
Direction, Editing: Arun Kumar Aravind
Production: Raju Malliath
Screenplay: Murali Gopy
Cinematography: Shehnad Jalaal
Sound: N.Harikumar
Music: Gopi Sunder
Cast: Indrajith Sukumaran, Murali Gopy, Anoop Menon, Nishaan, Tanushree Ghosh, Mythili, Jagathy Sreekumar, Lena
Ee Adutha Kaalathu blends a post-modern urban tale with the antiquity of the Puranas. It cuts through the different layers of population whose fates get intertwined by an incident. It’s a Rubik’s Cube of sorts. Vishnu is a rag-picker, a doting father, and an obedient husband. Ramani, his fiery wife, considers him an incorrigible bum. Madhuri was a starlet growing up in Mumbai. She is now a homemaker and mother to an eleven-year-old boy, but remains a head turner. Her husband Ajay Kurien, the CEO of an upmarket hospital, is a self- made man. Rustam is a North Indian bloke on a short-term contract in the city. Tom Cherian, the City Police Commissioner, wants to earn his medals the easy way. His girlfriend Roopa is a cutthroat journalist. There is also a serial killer out on the prowl.
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THE LAST STEP (Pele Akher)
Iran/2012/DCP/Colour/88’/Persian
Direction, Screenplay, Production: Ali Mosaffa
Cinematography: Alireza Barazandeh
Editing: Fardin Sahebzamani
Cast: Leila Hatami, Ali Mosaffa, Alireza Aghakhani, Hamed Behdad
Actress Leila bursts into laughter on camera during the filming of a dramatic scene. Her improper behaviour is a reaction to the recent death of her husband Koshrow, who accidentally fell down a flight of stairs. And it is Koshrow who serves as the film’s somewhat unreliable narrator, appearing in the movie even after his death. Director Ali Mosaffa has loosely adapted Tolstoy’s novella The Death of Ivan Ilyich (1886) and the James Joyce story The Dead (1914). He has once again cast his wife, noted actress Leila Hatami, in the lead. He himself took the part of the heroine’s hus- band.
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FLORBELA
Portugal/2012/DCP/Colour/119’/Portuguese
Direction, Screenplay: Vicente Alves do O
Production: Pandora da Cunha Telles, Pablo Iraola
Cinematography: Luis Branquinho
Editing: Joao Braz
Sound: Jaime Barros
Cast: Dalila Carmo, Ivo Canelas, Albano Jeronimo, Jose Neves, Antonio Fonseca, Carmen Santos, Anabela Teixeira, Rita Loureiro
Awards/Festivals
International Independent Film Festival of Braga -Grand Prize Augusta Bragacine, Best film
Portugal, 1920. Florbela Espanca, a woman ahead of her times and a famous poet, throws herself into a third marriage after two failed experiences. She stops writing to please her new husband, but soon feels restless and frustrated. When her brother, Apeles calls her to Lisbon, she runs away from her too quiet home to join him. Together they throw themselves into the dark side of the capital: alcohol, political riots, open air balls and their strong mutual attraction. Florbela finds herself torn between two forces: the love of her husband and the turmoil brought about by Apeles. When the latter dies a sudden death, her world collapses. Only one thing can save her: writing.Loosely based on the life of the Portuguese poet Florbela Espanca, portrayed by Dalila Carmo, Mr. Alves do Ó creates a biographical fantasy in Florbela.
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AJANTA
LE HAVRE
Finland- France-Germany/2011/DCP/Colour/103’/French- Finnish
Direction, Production,Screenplay: Aki Kaurismaki
Cinematography: Timo Salminen
Editing: Timo Linnasalo
Sound: Tero Malmberg
Cast: Andre Wilms, Kati Outinen, Blondin Miguel, Elina Salo, Jean-Pierre Leaud, Ilkka Koivula, Evelyne Didi, Quoc Dung Nguyen, Francois Monnie, Pierre Etaix, Roberto Piazza
Awards/Festivals
Cannes-FIPRESCI Prize, Prize of the Ecumenical Jury - Special Mention, Karlovy Vary, Melbourne, Locarno, San Sebastian, New York, Toronto, Telluride, Chicago: Gold Hugo, Vancouver, Stockholm, Rotterdam
In this warmhearted portrait of the French harbor city that gives the film its name, fate throws young African refugee Idrissa (Blondin Miguel) into the path of Marcel Marx (André Wilms), a soft spoken bohemian who works as a shoeshiner. With innate optimism and the unwavering support of his community, Marcel stands up to officials doggedly pursuing the boy for deportation. A political fairy tale that exists somewhere between the reality of contemporary France and the classic cinema of Jean-Pierre Melville and Marcel Carné, Le Havre is a charming, deadpan delight, whose gentle spontaneity is perhaps the most appealingly irresistible aspect of it.
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LIGHT IN DARKNESS (Luz Nas Trevas)
Brazil/2010/83’
Direction: Helena Ignez, Icaro C. Martins
Production: Mercurio Producoes
Screenplay: Helena Ignez
Cinematography: Jose Roberto Eliezer
Editing: Rodrigo Lima
Sound: Sinai Sganzerla, Rodrigo Lima, Helena Ignez, Lucio Branco
Light in Darkness follows the trajectory of two of the country’s most notorious criminals. While the Red Light Bandit (Ney Matogrosso) sits in the cell of a maximum-security prison recollecting his career and reading philosophy, his son, an outlaw known as all or Nothing (Andre Guerreiro Lopes), follows in his father’s footsteps leading a life of violence, women, and excess. Through flashbacks and comic book imagery, we experience the multitude of influences on the revolutionary minds in a city infected with corruption. Both the Red Light Bandit and All or Nothing is recognized as celebrities amongst the poor, only feeding a desire for more crime. In an ironic turn of events, justice is served, leading the estranged father and son to learn more about one another than they ever expected.
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BAD SEEDS (Comme Un Homme)
Luxembourg-Belgium-France/2012/35mm/Colour/95’/French
Director: Safy Nebbou
Production: Michel Saint-Jean
Screenplay: Safy Nebbou, Gilles Taurand
Cinematography: Pierre Cottereau
Editing: Bernard Sasia
Music: Jerome Reuter
Cast: Charles Berling, Emile Berling, Sarah Stern, Kevin Azais
Awards/Festivals
Montreal World Film Festival, Chicago
Quiet 16-year-old Louis, the high school headmaster’s son, has never been in trouble. His best friend, 18-year-old Greg, however, is his opposite: provocative, angry, violent, he has been kicked out of school for physically threatening young English teacher Camille. When Greg asks Louis to help him take revenge on Camille, Louis accepts, fascinated. Together, they kidnap the young woman and lock her in an old remote shack. But Greg’s plans with Camille are more sinister than Louis could have foreseen, forcing him to confront his own dark side…
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MS. TU HAU (Chi Tu Hau)
Vietnam/1963/35mm/B&W/78’/Vietnamese
Direction: Pham Ky Nam
Screenplay: Bui Duc Ai
Cinematography: Nguyen Khanh Du
Cast: Tra Giang, Ba Du, Minh Tri, Tran Phuong, Minh Dang
Tu Hau is a simple woman who takes care of her young daughter and her aging father-in-law while her husband is away fighting for the revolution. Her peaceful village is attacked and a series of tragic events befall her, each of which challenges her will. Eventually, her hardships drive her to join the resistance and she makes the difficult choice of leaving her child behind so she can help lead the front.
Tu Hau personified the strength and conviction of the Vietnamese woman of the era. The film is considered a masterpiece of Vietnamese cinema.
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LOVE LIKE POISON (Un Poison Violent)
France/2010/Colour/92’/French
Direction, Screenplay: Katell Quillevere
Production: Justin Taurand
Cinematography: Tom Harari
Editing: Thomas Marchand
Music: Olivier Mellano
Cast: Clara Augarde, Youen Gourvil Leboulanger, Lio, Stefano Cassetti, Michel Galabru
Awards/Festivals
Cannes, Seattle
Its spring break and 14-year-old Anna returns from boarding school to her village in Brittany, where she lives with her mother in the house of her elderly and ailing paternal grandfather. In her father’s absence, the young girl quickly understands that her parents are no longer together. Upon further investigation, Anna realizes that one of the reasons for this separation is their dis agreement about faith. Soon, things become complicated by the increasingly depressed mother’s attraction to an easy-going young village priest. Meanwhile, Anna is caught between her own religious convictions—she’s due for her confirmation—and her teenage sexual stirrings, which are awakened by choirboy Pierre. This naturalistic, coming-of-age film depicts the cycle of life from adolescence to adulthood, confirming the ongoing demands of the flesh and the way they frequently conflict with religious faith.
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SREEKUMAR
BEAUTIFUL 2012 (Mei Hao 2012)
Hong Kong-China/2012/Digibeta/Colour/90’/Putonghua-Mandarin-Korean-Cantonese
Direction: Kim Tae-yong, Gu Changwei, Tsai Ming-Liang, Ann Hui
Production: Agnes Paik
Screenplay: Kim Tae-yong, Kim Young-hyun
Cinematography: Kwon Sang-jun
Editing: Seong Su-a
Cast: Gong Hyo-jin, Yan Lianke, Lee Kang-Sheng, Francis Ng
Awards/Festivals
Hong Kong, Shanghai, Taipei, Vancouver,
Busan, Cannes Film Festival Critics’ Week
Closing Film (Walker)
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PIETA
South Korea/2012/Digibeta/Colour/104’/Korean
Direction, Screenplay, Editing: Kim Ki-duk
Production: Kim Ki-duk Film, Kim Soon-mo
Cinematography: Jo Yeong-jik
Sound: Seung-yeop Lee
Music: Park In-young
Cast: Cho Min-soo, Lee Jung-jin
Awards/Festivals
Venice- Golden Lion, Golden Mouse, Little
Golden Lion, Nazareno Taddei Award
Toronto, Hamburg, Busan, Sitges, Hong Kong
Hired by moneylenders, a man lives as a loan shark brutally threatening people for pay back their debts. This man, without any family and therefore with nothing to lose, continues his merciless way of life regardless of all the pain he has caused to a countless number of people. One day, a woman appears in front of him claiming to be his mother. He coldly rejects her at first, but gradually accepts her in his life. He decides to quit his cruel job and to live a decent life. Then suddenly the mother is kidnapped. Assuming that it would be by someone he has hurt in the past, he starts to track down all the people he has harassed. The man finally finds the one, only to discover horrifying and dark secrets that were better left unrevealed.
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DELWENDE
Burkina Faso-France-Switzerland/2005/89'
Direction, Screenplay: S. Pierre Yameogo
Production: Pierre-Alain Meier, S. Pierre Yameogo
Cinematography: Jurg Hassler
Editing: Jean-Christophe Ane
Cast: Claire Ilboudo, Daniel Kabore, Abdoulaye Komboudi, Blandine Yameogo, Celestin Zongo
Adapted from a true story, Delwende unveils the pathetic life of a West African village ravaged by epidemic, poverty and superstitions. A beautiful young dancer is exiled to a mysterious community of witches, on the backdrop of a series of deaths of infants. Pougbila is on a quest to find her mother. Charged with witchcraft and the children’s deaths, Pougbila’s mother, who sus- pects her husband of having raped her daughter, had been expelled from the village. Diahrra finds a groom for Pougbila from the neighboring village. Amidst this, the village fool hears on the radio, the real cause of the children’s deaths... Dealing with the multifarious ways in which women are oppressed by the patriarchal order, Delwende/Stand up and walk from Burkina Faso belongs both to the auteur approach and the oral tradition. Delwende’s subtitle (‘Stand up and walk’) also carries a message of hope for women aspiring to break out of the limitations imposed upon them.
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THE CRIER
Cheeka
India/2012/HD/Colour/80’
Direction, Screenplay,Editing: M. Adeyapartha Rajan
Production: Tom Alter,M Adeyapartha Rajan
Cinematography: Praveen Chaturvedi
Music: Dr. Revati Sakalkar, Uday Chandra, Prabol Majumdar
Cast: Tom Alter, Mona Ambegaonkar, Uday Chandra, Paru Uma Gambhir, Vineet Verma
Awards/Festivals
Kolkata
Cheekha, the Crier explores the trail of a monk who descends from the Himalayas, drawn to an unusually disturbing, almost erotic, moaning. The monk traces the sound to a house where a pros- titute is making love to a man. Soon he realizes that those sounds were being made by an old man named Cheekha who has been confined under her bed for many years. He is part of a cult tradition of men who cries, moans, sings, and screams for an ageing prostitute, hiding under her bed. Forgetting his life as a recluse, the monk sets out to fathom the secret life of the prostitute and there begins the story of love, light, and liberation.
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SALVATION
Australia/2008/Colour/98’/English
Direction, Screenplay: Paul Cox
Production: Paul Cox, Tony Llewellyn-Jones
Cinematography: Ian Jones
Editing: Aden Young
Music: Paul Grabowsky
Cast: Wendy Hughes, Bruce Myles, NatashaNovak, Kim Gyngell
Irina has left Russia to support her mother and daughter, and has fallen into prostitution in Melbourne, but her world is constantly under threat by fellow Russian, Anton who has under- world connections. Gloria is a televangelist with a thriving church franchise, and is married to Barry, a biblical scholar who needs more human warmth, intimacy and love than Gloria can offer. He starts to confide in and trust Irina and he makes a decision that changes all their lives. Paul Cox spins a wry, acidic tale in Salvation that unmasks televangelists as fakes and moral dwarfs. None too subtly, he makes a single mother forced into prostitution as the device with which to unseat the self-delusional Gloria and her long suffering husband. Although serious in intent, Cox is keen to put a smile on our face with Salvation, and manages just that with a wicked ending.
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REMYA
OUTRAGE BEYOND (Autoreiji: Biyondo)
Japan/2012/35mm/Colour/110’/Japanese-Korean
Direction, Screenplay: Takeshi Kitano
Production: Mori Masayuki, Yoshida Takio
Cinematography: Katsumi Yanagijima
Editing: Takeshi Kitano, Yoshinori Ohta
Music: Keiichi Suzuki
Cast: Takeshi Kitano, Ryo Kase, Tomokazu Miura, Ken Mitsuishi, Hirofumi Arai, Fumiyo Kohinata, Toshiyuki Nishida, Shun Sugata
Awards/ Festivals
Venice,Toronto, New York
When a car dredged from Tokyo Bay is revealed to contain the body of the city’s top anti-gang investigator, the police immediately launch a full scale crackdown on organized crime, and appoint the corrupt Kataoka to head the investigation. Eager to gain favor with the rival families of Sanno and Hanabishi, Kataoka wheels and deals with both sides, manipulating his way into the profitable gig as the yakuza’s resident crooked cop. But when a crucial move against Sanno chairman Kato goes sour, Kataoka enlists the help of ex-gangster Ohtomo, who has his own reasons for wanting to oust Kato and his underboss Ishihara. Sure to delight fans, this slick action flick is cool and deliberate with bone rattling bursts of violence sure to keep you alert, no matter the hour.
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AFTER THE BATTLE
Egypt- France/2012/35mm/Colour/116’/Arabic
Direction: Yousry Nasrallah
Production: Walid El-Kordy, Georges-Marc Benamou
Screenplay: Yousry Nasrallah, Omar Schama
Cinematography: Samir Bahsan
Editing: Mona Rabi
Sound: Ibrahim Dessouky
Music: Tamer Karawan
Cast: Menna Chalaby, Bassem Samra, Nahed El Sebai, Salah Abdallah, Phaedra
Awards/Festivals
Cannes, Toronto
Mahmoud is one of the Tahrir Square Knights, who carried out attacks on protestors at the Square on 2 February 2011. After the incident, Mahmoud lost his job, and was subjected to humiliation and ostracization by his own community. He and his family are in a deplorable state, when he meets Reem, a young, secular Egyptian divorcee and modern-thinker who works in advertising. This will be the encounter of two individuals as also of two different worlds. Not only does the film explore how individuals experience major historic upheavals, but also how an over- whelming present can be transposed to a film in the here and now. Part cinema verite, part fiction, After the Battle possesses a raw, captivating energy that takes us to the heart of a revolution, and the new world that it has wrought.
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RANIA
Brazil/2011/35mm/Colour/85’/ Brazilian-Portuguese-English
Direction, Production: Robert Marques
Screenplay: Luisa Marques, Roberta Marques
Cinematography: Heloisa Passos
Editing: Bernardo Barcellos, Rob Das, Luisa Marques, Roberta Marques
Sound: Bernardo Uzeda
Cast: Graziela Felix, Mariana Lima, Nataly Rocha, Rob Das, Demick Lopes
Awards/Festivals
Rotterdam, Rio, Trinidad-Tobago
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
16-year-old Rania studies dance and lives with her mother and two brothers in restricted circumstances. With her father, a fisherman, also facing hard times, Rania contemplates following her friend Lizi and becoming a dancer in a grotty night club. A wonderful opportunity then presents itself for her to go with a dance troupe to New York, but Rania’s father refuses to give his permission. How far will she go to achieve her dreams? For her first feature film, Roberta Marques makes a real movie of women, made by women and where heroes are women, each one in a very distinct way, and gives a beautiful first role to the young Graziela Felix.
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DHANYA
CHICKS (La Vie Au Ranch)
France/2009/Colour/90’/French
Direction: Sophie Letourneur
Production: Emmanuel Chaumet
Screenplay: Delphine Agut, Sophie Letourneur
Cinematography: Claire Mathon
Editing: Michel Klochendler
Music: Maxence Cyrin, Benjamin Siksou
Sound: Julien Cloquet
Cast: Sarah-Jane Sauvegrain, Eulalie Juster, Mahault Mollaret, Elsa Pierret, Jade Tong Cuong, Angele Ferreux
Awards/Festivals
Rotterdam, BAFICI, Locarno, Entrevues FilmFestival, Audience Award, Best Feature Film
The communal life of a group of Parisian girls revolving around an apartment affectionately known as ‘the Ranch’, is the stage for Sophie Letourneur’s debut feature, which tells of a life of talking, smoking, drinking and partying. Bold, natural and utterly believable, Chicks underlines how poorly served cinema often is for female characterisation. Letourneur and cinematographer Claire Mathon’s camera is relatively steady given their subjects; it’s more observational than restive, practically anthropological. But the movie does reflect its characters through its narrative—with little actual plot,it feels as aimless as a young literature major. Stuff happens; the girls bicker with boyfriends, break away from their group of friends to become individuals, move from the collectivity of childhood to the autonomy of adulthood, coupled and not. Like its characters (and most people), the movie mellows as it moves forward.
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STAVISKY
France-Italy/1974/35mm/Colour/115'/French
Direction: Alan Resnais
Production: Alexandre Mnouchkine, Oscar Dancingers
Screenplay: Jorge Semprun
Cinematography: Sacha Vierny
Editing: Albert Jurgenson
Sound: Jean-Pierre Ruh and Bernard Bats
Cast: Jean-Paul Belmondo, Charles Boyer, Francois Perier
Awards/Festivals
Cannes Film Festival, Special Tribute, Charles Boyer, 1974, New York Film Critics Circle, Best Supporting Actor, Charles Boyer, 1974
France, 1933. Police inspector Bonny is conducting a private investigation into the activities of Serge Alexandre, who is actually the infamous Russian swindler Stavisky. This is just one of Alexandre’s tribulations, however. His business empire is about to crumble owing to lack of funds. To escape ruin, he resorts to increasingly desperate measures and as his world collapses, there would be only one way out… A compelling and seductively stylish period piece, Stavisky investigates historical events. In Stavisky, Resnais adopts a subjective framework and also plays with our notion of time, using flashbacks and fast-forwards to break the linear narrative.
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SREE PADMANABHA
BUSINESS AS USUAL
Ukraine/2012/35mm/DCP/Colour/88’
Direction: Valentyn Vasyanovych
Production: Iya Myslytska
Screenplay: Valentyn Vasyanovych, Iya Myslytska, Mamaciej Sobieszczanski, Malgorzata Sobieszczanska
Cinematography: Iurii Dunai
Editing: Valentyn Vasyanovych, Maxym Vasianovych
Music: Oleksandra Morozova, Borys Shkolovyi, Kostyantyn Bushynsky, Valentyn Vasyanovych, Mykyta oiseyev
Cast: Taras Denysenko, Vitaliy Linetskiy, Lesia Samayeva, Semen Furman
Awards/Festivals
Odessa,Tirana
The protagonist, Tolik, comes from a family of doctors, but is fired after a fist-fight with some patients. However, he chooses to view this event as a chance to start a new life. Finally his dream of being a “free” poet will come true and maybe, if he’s lucky, fame and fortune will follow. He sets out with his old friend Slavik, a character who knows everything: the meaning of life, how to make money, how to be happy. He drags the protagonist into a series of absurd situations, and ultimately, Tolik ends up losing almost everything. But it seems that family drama and the adventures with Slavik would be the inspiration for truly magnificent poetry.
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ON THE ROAD
Brazil-USA-UK-France/2012/DCP/Colour/124’/English
Direction: Walter Salles
Production: Charles Gillibert, Nathanael Karmitz, Rebecca Yeldham
Screenplay: Jose Rivera, Jack Kerouac
Cinematography: Eric Gautier
Editing: Francois Gedigier
Sound: Brian Copenhagen
Music: Gustavo Santaolalla
Cast: Sam Riley, Garrett Hedlund, Kristen Stewart, Kirsten Dunst, Tom Sturridge, Viggo Mortensen, Amy Adams, Alice Braga, Steve Buscemi, Danny Morgan, Giovanna Zacarias
Awards/Festivals
Cannes, Toronto, AFI FEST, Sydney
The film follows narrator Sal Paradise, an aspiring writer, drawn to the energy and charisma of his friend Dean Moriarty. Sal’s voice-over is our entrée into the world of the Beat Generation, as he joins Dean on a trip through the mental and physical landscape of postwar America. Dean carves a wild path through the highways and byways of the nation, drinking and sexing in and out of trouble, while Sal stores up a stash of memories that will serve him well as a writer. Along with Dean’s girlfriend and Carlo Marx, they go cruising in a beat-up car with all the time in the world, to explore various states of ecstasy via drugs, alcohol and sex. But even transcendental hedonism has its limits… On the Road is a portrait of a generation not afraid to break rules in their search for meaning. A must-watch.
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SHUTTER
India/2012/DCP/Colour/136’/Malayalam
Direction, Screenplay: Joy Mathew
Production: Saritha Ann Thomas
Cinematography: Hari Nair
Editing: Bijith Bala
Sound: Ranganath Ravee
Music: Jacob Panikkar, Bibin Samuel
Cast: Sreenivasan, Lal, Sajitha Madathil, Vinay Fort, Premkumar, Riya Augustin
Three individuals — Manoharan, a filmmaker wandering through places with his dream project; Rasheed, an expatriate from Gulf; and Suren a typical autorickshaw driver from Kozhikode — turn out to be close friends who help each other and become aware of their follies. The film is based on the realities of the middleclass Malayali lives, cinematically choreographed through the eyes of Manoharan. The story spans two nights and a day.
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THE REPENTANT (Le Repenti)
Algeria-France/2012/DCP/Colour/87’/Arabic
Direction, Screenplay: Merzak Allouache
Production: Yacine Djadi
Cinematography: Mohamed Tayeb Lagoune
Editing: Sylvie Gadmer
Sound: Ali Mahfiche, Xavier Thibault, Carole Verner, Julien Perez
Cast: Adila Bendimerad, Khaled Benaissa, Nabil Asli
Algeria region of the high flatlands. As Islamist groups continue to spread terror, Rashid, a young Jihadist, leaves the mountains to return to his village. In keeping with the law “of pardon and national harmony”, he has to surrender to the police and give up his weapon. He thus receives amnesty and becomes a “repenti”. But the law cannot erase his crimes, and for Rashid, it is the beginning of a one-way journey of violence, secrets, and manipulation.
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THE PIROGUE (La Pirogue)
France-Senegal-Germany/2012/DCP/Colour/87’/French-Wolof
Direction: Moussa Toure
Screenplay: Moussa Toure, Abasse Ndione, Eric Neve
Production: Adrien Magne, Eric Neve, Alexandra Swenden
Cinematography: Thomas Letellier
Editing: Josie Milievic
Sound: Martin Boissau, Thierry Delor, Agnes Ravez
Music: Prince Ibrahima Ndour
Cast: Souleymane Seye Ndiaye, Laity Fall, Malamine Drame “Yalenguen,” Balla Diarra, Salif “Jean” Diallo, Babacar Oualy, Mame Astou Diallo, Saikou Lo, Ngalgou Diop
Awards/Festivals
Film Fest Munchen- Arri Award, Cannes, Durban
Baye Laye is the captain of a fishing pirogue. Like many of his Senegalese compatriots, he sometimes dreams of new horizons, where he can earn a better living for his family. When he is offered to lead one of the many pirogues that head towards Europe via the Canary Island, he reluctantly accepts the job, knowing full-well the dangers that lie ahead. Leading a group of 30 men who don’t all speak the same language, some of whom have never seen the sea, Baye Laye will confront many perils in order to reach the distant coasts of Europe. Handsomely shot in fairly conventional style by a mixed Senegalese and French crew, La Pirogue is a well-crafted melodrama in classic issue- movie mold.
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NILA
BELLE EPINE
France/2010/Colour/80’/French
Direction: Rebecca Zlotowski
Production: Frederic Jouve
Screenplay: Rebecca Zlotowski, Gaelle Mace
Cinematography: George Lechaptois
Editing: Julien Lacheray
Music: ROB
Cast: Lea Seydoux, Anais Demoustier,
Johan Libereau, Anna Sigalevitch
Awards/Festivals
Prix Louis Delluc, Best First Film-2010 Seattle IFF, Zurich IFF
Prudence Friedman is 17 years old. Her mother died a few days ago. Left alone in the family apartment and to her own devices, she encounters Maryline, a rebellious teenager who takes her to an illegal racetrack in Rungis, on the outskirts of Paris, where customized cars and bikes dangerously spin. Fascinated by the circuit gang, Reynald, Franck, and the others, Prudence attempts to establish her place among them by trying to pass her loneliness off for freedom. Neither sentimentality nor nostalgia for reckless years gone by can be found in the film, which makes its tale of teenage rebellion in the face of overwhelming grief fall closer to a sobering character study than a classical youth film.
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SAME OLD SONG (On Connait La Chanson)
France/1997/35mm/Colour/120'/French
Direction: Alan Resnais
Production: Bruno Pesery
Screenplay: Agnes Jaoui
Cinematography: Renato Berta
Editing: Herve De Luze
Sound: Pierre Lenoir
Cast: Pierre Arditi, Sabine Azema, Jean Pierre Bacri, Andre Dussollier
Awards/Festivals
Berlin International Film Festival, Silver Bear, 1998, French Academy of Cinema, Best French Film, Best Actor for Andre Dussollier, Best Sound, Pierre Lenoir, Best Screenplay, Agnes Joui, 1977
Odile is frustrated with her dull marriage to Claude. Camille, her sister is working for a doctorate in an mysterious subject and suffers from a panic disorder. Their lives take a turn when three men enter the picture. Nicholas, an old flame of Odile, returns to Paris to buy an apartment for his family. Simon a history-freak and romantic radio-playwright also falls in love with Camille, hiding the fact that he is an estate agent working for the unscrupulous. Marc, the boss of the agency also desires Camille.... Marking Resnais’ triumphal return to mainstream French cinema, this film deals with the typically Resnaisian themes of time, place and memory. Resnais adopts Dennis Potter’s lip-synch to music device by weaving popular French songs from the past fifty years into the dialogue, creating a comical effect.
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THE DELAY (La demora)
Uruguay- Mexico- France/2012/35mm/Colour/84’/Spanish
Direction: Rodrigo Pla
Production: Imcine
Screenplay: Laura Santullo
Cinematography: Maria Secco
Editing: Miguel Shverdfinger
Sound: Fabian Oliver, Alejandro De Icaza, Sergio Diaz, Arturo Zarate
Music: Jacobo Lieberman, Leonardo Heiblum
Cast: Roxana Blanco, Carlos Vallarino
Awards/Festivals
Moscow- Grand Prix, Berlin, London, Sydney Latin American Film Festival, Chicago, Calgary Latin Wave, Melbourne, Haifa
Overworked and underpaid, a forty-something mother of three is driven to abandon her senile father so she can take better care of her children. Her trip to the social security office reveals that she is too poor to afford to put her father in a home, but still too wealthy to qualify for benefits…
Special Thanks: Nimmy Francis